This article considers copyright knowledge and skills as a new literacy that can be developed through the application of digital media literacy pedagogies. Digital media literacy is emerging from more established forms of media literacy that have existed in schools for several decades and have continued to change as the social and cultural practices around media technologies have changed. Changing requirements of copyright law present specific new challenges for media literacy education because the digitisation of media materials provides individuals with opportunities to appropriate and circulate culture in ways that were previously impossible. This article discusses a project in which a group of preservice media literacy educators were introduced to knowledge and skills required for the productive and informed use of different copyrights frameworks. The students’ written reflections and video production responses to a series of workshops about copyright are discussed, as are the opportunities and challenges provided by copyright education in preservice teacher education.

Dr Michael Dezuanni lectures in film and media curriculum in the undergraduate and graduate Faculty of Education courses at Queensland University of Technology. His current research interests include digital media literacies and participatory culture, post structuralist approaches to theorising the relationship between young people and media and media education in school curricula.

Cushla Kapitzke is Associate Professor at the School of Cultural and Language Studies in Education, Queensland University of Technology, Australia. Her current research interests include creative and educational governance in relation to the shrinking domains of public knowledge and public education within economies driven by global capital.

Dr Radha Iyer is a lecturer at the School of Cultural and Language Studies n Education, Queensland University of Technology, Australia. Her research interests include media literacy, curricular literacies, gender issues and teacher education.

We are interested in empirical and conceptual approaches to theorising globalisation, development, sustainability, wellbeing, subjectivities, networks, new media, gaming, multimodality, literacies and related issues and their implications for how we educate and why. We encourage submissions in a variety of modes and invite guest editors to propose special editions.

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The scale and speed at which digital culture has entered all aspects of our lives is unprecedented. We publish articles and digital works including eBooks (published under Creative Commons Licenses) that address the use of digital (and other) technologies and how they are taken up across diverse institutional and non-institutional contexts. Scholarly reviews of books, conferences, exhibits, games, software and hardware are also encouraged.

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Digital Culture & Education (DCE) invites submissions on any aspect of digital culture and education. We welcome submissions of articles and digital works that address the use of digital (and other) technologies and how they are taken up across diverse institutional and non-institutional contexts. For further inquiries and submission of work, send an email to editor@ digitalcultureandeducation.com